267 Tuvalu's scoring system

The empathetic reporter asked all the viewers who wanted to immigrate to Tuvalu. Pen, fun, and www.biquge.info

"What kind of living benefits do people who have just immigrated to Tuvalu have? As we have just seen, in New Tuvalu, there is only this one villa area that has been built, and there is no other place to stay. So, where do immigrants who don't have access to the highest level of subsistence allowance live?"

At this time, the group had already walked out of the villa that had just been visited, Castro took out a few drawings from the car, and after finding someone to pull them apart, he introduced them to reporters.

"We are currently building two other cities that are part of the future development plan for New Tuvalu. "In these two cities, there are apartment complexes and living quarters for people who have just immigrated to Tuvalu," Castro said, pointing to the drawings. ”

After motioning to the cameraman to take pictures of the drawings for a while, the reporter asked: "Are these houses also provided for free? Are there also furniture and household appliances in them, can they also be purchased in advance from the future living allowance?"

"Not really. "According to Tuvalu's regulations, new immigrants are only entitled to three months of free accommodation and living allowance, and during the three months, we rate their behaviour and have the right to deport them at any time if there is a serious non-compliance with our Tuvalu Code of Conduct," Castro explained. If Tuvalu's Code of Conduct is strictly adhered to, then they will become full citizens of Tuvalu and will begin to implement a grading system to determine their level of welfare based on their contribution to Tuvalu. ”

The reporter asked: "So, do you think that there is a certain degree of human rights inequality in this kind of policy?"

"On the contrary, I think that's true equality. Li Daniu was not angry because of this reporter's question, and said with a smile: "Pay and return is a thing that must be proportional, if you are unwilling to pay, and you want to survive through the help of others all day long, then this kind of talent is trampling on equality." ”

The reporter was already beating the drum in his heart at this time, but he knew that Tuvalu's laws stipulated that it was not allowed to be disrespectful to the king, but when he heard the barrage prompt from his headphones, he continued to ask.

"Your Majesty, but everyone's abilities are different, and some people can create very great value, such as you. Some people can do some very ordinary work, and the value they create will be very small, in this case, is it unfair to score according to the value created?"

"It seems that you haven't looked at our Tuvalu grading system in detail before. Li Daniu laughed and motioned for Castro to explain.

"Our grading system in Tuvalu is very user-friendly. After Castro coughed, he said: "Although we will provide a certain degree of rating tilt for many talents who can create great value, we also have a corresponding humanization mechanism for Tuvaluans who create relatively little value." ”

"For example, a farmer can only create value through farming or breeding, if judged by the market economy, unless he has a super-large fully mechanized farm, otherwise he can create very little value. But in our Tuvalu scoring system, the so-called value creation is not the market value of the goods they produce, but the social value they create. ”

"Farmers are the cornerstone of social existence, and without farmers farming, everyone would starve to death. Therefore, there is a multiplier for the criteria we use to score farmers in Tuvalu. For specific details, you can refer to the detailed scoring criteria on Tuvalu's official website, and here, I can only make an analogy. ”

"If a farmer is able to work hard, he will not be rated much lower in a year than a civil servant who works for the Tuvalu government. In the same way, in addition to the farmer, the same is true of the worker, even if he is only a person who works on an assembly line. Even the sanitation worker who is responsible for cleaning the streets in Tuvalu is rated by the social value he creates. ”

Hearing Castro's explanation, all the audience were shocked, the social value created by a person is not proportional to the market value, which is already a tacit fact in the world. Tuvalu, on the other hand, uses two sets of criteria at the same time, and applies a multiplied scoring coefficient to the low-level workers who do not create high market value, so that they can get no less than those who create high market value.

Is this progress, or is it regression?

The reporter asked: "However, with the rapid development of science and technology, many ordinary jobs will gradually be replaced by mechanization and intelligence.

Li Daniu explained: "What you said is very good, if I say that I am an inventor, I think no one will deny it. So, from an inventor's point of view, I think machines are bound to replace humans. ”

If you think so, why do you still pay so much attention to the peasants and workers?

In the minds of many people, when questions just popped up, Li Daniu continued.

"But will this replacement take a certain amount of time, ten or twenty years? In the next 10 or 20 years, the role of peasants and ordinary workers will simply not be replaced. As for ten or twenty years from now, I still believe that machinery still needs to be repaired and maintained, and even commanded. ”

The reporter asked: "However, whether it is repair, maintenance, or command." All require a certain degree of professional knowledge, and this knowledge is not good at ordinary farmers, so what should they do when the time comes?"

Li Daniu laughed and said, "On the plane just now, I said that Tuvalu will implement 16 years of compulsory education for all orphans who have immigrated to them. Do you think that this education policy is only for orphans who have come from immigrants? Of course not, it is that all Tuvaluan children of school age will be able to enjoy this education policy, which means that in the future, all Tuvaluans will be highly educated. ”

"Moreover, our approach to education in Tuvalu is based on the interests of our students. In addition to the necessary basic education, they can learn whatever they are interested in. If their interest is to be a farmer, then they can study agriculture ......"

When Li Daniu talked about these relevant policies in Tuvalu, audiences around the world began to think about it seriously.

A country that does not discriminate against any type of work, a country that implements 16 years of compulsory education, a country that ranks first in the world in terms of living welfare, and a country that enshrines quality behavior in law......

Why is it that a small island country in the South Pacific can do so much and dare to do it to such an extent, while its own country, which claims to be a world power, has no way to do what Tuvalu did?

Is Tuvalu rich? His king claims to be the richest individual of all time, but what is that money compared to the country's GDP?

Is it because there are so few people in Tuvalu, so their Majesty the King can serve a limited number of people with limited money?

But their Majesty the King dared to declare to the whole world that he would adopt all the orphans whom no one wanted, and that he would provide them with sixteen years of compulsory education and room and board. In the face of orphans all over the world, does he really have enough money?

When the world began to think, Li Daniu continued to take reporters to visit the relevant facilities and plans of New Tuvalu, and among the audience, although there were some people who had seen the planning map published on Tuvalu's official website before, everyone knew that planning is one thing, and whether it is built according to the plan is another thing.

When the audience saw that almost every plan was under construction, and even some of the plans on the drawings could already be seen as the general outline, countless people had an urge to immigrate to Tuvalu now.

Everybody knows that when New Tuvalu really develops, what is the difference between wanting to immigrate and ascending to the sky? )